AAS Fellows and Affiliates are distinguished researchers who represent the continent’s talent and promising men and women from across the globe.
Chemical Sciences
South Africa
Professor Naidoo completed his PhD at the University of Michigan (USA) in 1994 after which he spent two years as a Postdoctoral Fellow at Cornell University (USA). He joined the faculty at the University of Cape Town (UCT) as lecturer in Chemistry in 1996 and was inaugurated as Professor of Physical Chemistry in 2011.
In recognition of his expertise in computational science as it is practiced in chemistry, chemical physics and biochemistry Kevin Naidoo was awarded one of the first of 21 South African research Chairs (SARChI) in 2007 for a period of five years in Scientific Computing, twice renewed for 2012-2016 and 2017-2021. He played a pivotal role in the establishment of South Africa’s only Centre for High Performance Computing, of which he served as the acting research director 2006-2007. As founding director of the Scientific Computing Research Unit at UCT he established the only South African postgraduate programmes awarding M.Sc.’s and PhD’s in Computational Science.
His depth and breadth of expertise is internationally sought after as seen from his editorial board membership of the Journal of Computational Chemistry (Wiley, 2004 -), Carbohydrate Research (Elsevier, 2015-) and the Journal of Molecular Modeling (Springer, 2018-). He is regularly invited to review research proposals for major international science and funding agencies such as the ACS’ Petroleum Research Fund, the Czech Academy of Sciences, Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research and the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics.
Professor Naidoo’s principal scientific interests are the development and application of computational tools for the life sciences with a special focus on cancer diagnostics and therapeutics. As a testament to his breadth and depth of expertise he is most probably the only theoretical chemist to lead a clinical investigation to establish a genetic biomarker for Breast Cancer as discovered by Big Data Analytics.
Medical & Health Sciences
Kenya
Sam Kariuki completed his MSc in 1991 and joined the Centre for Microbiology (CMR), Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) as an Assistant Research Officer. He obtained his PhD in Tropical Medicine from the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine in 1997 and rose through the ranks to become a Chief Research Officer and then Director of CMR in 2011 and served in this position until April, 2018.
His research interests are in the epidemiology and molecular characterisation of enteric bacterial pathogens and antimicrobial resistance, including for invasive non-typhoidal salmonellosis (NTS) and typhoid fever, Vibrio cholerae and Escherichia coli. He has authored/co-authored over 140 papers in peer-reviewed journals and 3 text books on Antimicrobial Resistance and Food Safety. As chair of the Global Antimicrobial Resistance Partnership (GARP)-Kenya (2009-present), he led the initiative to develop the National Action Plan for reduction and control of Antimicrobial Resistance (Published in January 2011 and updated in May, 2017), and I was a member of the National Antimicrobial Stewardship Advisory Committee that advised Ministries of Health and Agriculture on policy on prudent use of Antimicrobials in human and veterinary medicine.
Sam is the Deputy Director, Research and Development, KEMRI. He is also a Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute International Fellow and a visiting Professor of Tropical Microbiology, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, UK. He is also a visiting Professor in Tropical Microbiology, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, and a member of the American Sciety for Microbiology. He serves as World Health Organization consultant in areas of food safety, antimicrobial resistance and infectious disease surveillance for the region, and a member of the Advisory Group for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Resistance (AGISAR) (http://www.who.int/foodborne_disease/resistance/agisar_members/en/).
Medical & Health Sciences
Morocco
Dr Nabila Bouatia-Naji obtained her PhD on Human genetics in 2006 from the University of Lille, France. After a postdoctoral fellowship at the Medical Research Council, Cambridge University, UK, she was recruited as an INSERM research associate in 2009. Since 2011, she works at the Paris Cardiovascular research center (PARCC), an INSERM and Université Sorbonne Paris Cité affiliated research center. She is the director of an ERC Starting Grant supported team (2017-2022) and an INSERM labelled (Team3) at the PARCC-INSERM (Since 2018).
Her research is dedicated to study the genetic etiology of cardiometabolic diseases and has widely contributed to the identification of numerous genetics risk factors through genome-wide association studies and functional genomics. After a solid publication track on the genetics of diabetes related traits, she focused her research on the study of fibromuscular dysplasia that causes hypertension and predisposes to stroke and spontaneous coronary artery dissection, an emerging form of acute myocardial infarction predominantly afflicting women. She uses cutting edge genomic technology and multidisciplinary approaches in wet and dry lab experimentation to address the genetic predisposition to these women specific arterial diseases.
Dr Bouatia-Naji is a well-recognized scientist who is committed to promote women to embrace scientific research careers, especially at the leadership level. She obtained prestigious and highly competitive funding and awards (Young investigator Chair, French Research Agency 2013-2017, European Research Council Starting Grant 2017-2022, Young investigator award International Conference of Human Genetics, Kyoto 2016). She has published over 56 original articles and reviews, including in high impact journals (e.g Science, Nature genetics, JACC), raised >2.3 Million€ through highly competitive funding schemes.
Biosciences
Zimbabwe
Adrienne Lesley Edkins is Associate Professor in Biochemistry and NRF/DST SARChI Chair in Molecular and Cellular Biology of the Eukaryotic Stress Response (since 2015) in the Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology at Rhodes University. She also holds a Newton Advanced Fellowship (2018-2021) from the Newton Fund of the Royal Academy of Medical Sciences, and is Director of the Biomedical Biotechnology Research Unit (BioBRU) at Rhodes University. She obtained her PhD from the University of Glasgow on the Wellcome Trust PhD programme in Molecular Functions in Disease (2008) under the supervision of Prof Bill Cushley.
An NRF-rated scientist (Y1, 2014-2019), Adrienne’s research centres on molecular, cell biological and biochemical approaches to understanding fundamental mechanisms of the stress response in normal and disease conditions, with an emphasis on cancer and stem cell biology. She has trained 5 postdoctoral fellows and 39 MSc/PhD students, and produced over 43 peer-reviewed journal articles, 2 science engagement articles, 8 book chapters and 3 edited books in this field (2018). She is an editorial board member for the Cancer Panel of the journal Scientific Reports (2018-2020).
Adrienne has been recognised for her research with the VC Distinguished Research Medal from Rhodes University (2015) and the South African Women in Science (SAWiSA) Award for Distinguished Young Scientist in the Natural/Engineering Sciences from the South African DST (2018).
Adrienne is also a member of the Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf), the Royal Society of South Africa and the South Africa Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (SASBMB). She served on the Council of SASBMB from 2014-2018.
Mathematical Sciences
South Africa
Mamokgethi Phakeng began her term of office as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cape Town on 1 July 2018, where she had been serving as Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Research and Internationalisation since January 2017. Previous to this appointment she served as Vice Principal for Research and Innovation at the University of South Africa (Unisa) for five years, after serving three years as Executive Dean of the College of Science, Engineering and Technology at the same university. She holds a PhD in Mathematics Education from the University of the Witwatersrand and is a highly regarded B1 NRF-rated scientist with over 60 research papers and five edited volumes published. She has won numerous awards for her research and community work, including the Order of the Baobab (Silver) conferred on her by the President of South Africa in April 2016. In August 2014 CEO magazine named her the most influential woman academic in Africa and in August 2016 she was awarded the prestigious Businesswoman of the Year Award in the education category. In 2016 she was appointed by the then Deputy President of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa, to chair the Human Resource Development Council standing committee on Mathematics and Science Education. Kgethi is founder of the Adopt-a-learner Foundation (www.adopt-a-learner.com), a non-profit organisation that started in 2004 and provides financial and educational support to students from township and rural areas to acquire higher education qualifications.
Medical & Health Sciences
South Africa
Professor Mulder graduated with a Bachelor degree, cum laude, in Chemistry and Microbiology, and a first class Honours degree in Microbiology, followed by a PhD in Medical Microbiology. She then moved into the field of Bioinformatics and was employed at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) in Cambridge for 8.5 years, as a Team Leader responsible for development of InterPro and the Gene Ontology Annotation Projects.
She currently heads the Computational Biology Division in the Department of Integrative Biomedical Sciences at the University of Cape Town (UCT) (http://www.cbio.uct.ac.za) and is a full member of the Institute for Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine. Her research is in the area of bioinformatics of infectious diseases, including pathogen and host genomics and biological networks, African population genetics, human variation and disease, and microbiome studies. Her group also provides bioinformatics support and training to UCT researchers and beyond. She has over 140 publications, and in 2016 was elected to the University of Cape Town College of Fellows.
Internationally, Prof Mulder is involved in capacity development in Africa, as leader of H3ABioNet, a Pan-African Bioinformatics network for H3Africa. H3ABioNet is a network of 28 institutions in 16 African countries, which aims to build bioinformatics capacity for genomics research on the continent and develop the infrastructure for managing large-scale genomics data. She is a member of more than 6 different advisory boards for international projects and training initiatives and is on the Board of Directors for the International Society for Computational Biology. She plays a leading role in Bioinformatics education in South Africa, the rest of Africa and globally.
Biosciences
South Africa
Prof Mary Scholes, a graduate of the University of the Witwatersrand, is currently a full professor in the School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, where she holds a Research Chair in Systems Analysis. Her research activities focus on systems analysis in a variety of disciplines including, soil fertility, food security and biogeochemistry in savannas, plantation forests and croplands. Her research funds are mostly sourced from government and industry, she is currently actively involved in monitoring water pollution, food security, forestry and climate change and policy implementation in South Africa. Her publication record is extensive; she has mentored over 85 postgraduate students and she teaches at postgraduate level and undergraduate levels at the University. She has been awarded the Vice-Chancellors Teaching, Research and Academic Citizen Awards. She is a fellow of the Royal Society of South Africa, the South African Academy of Science, the World Academy of Sciences and the African Academy of Sciences. She is the recipient of several national and international awards including being elected as a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Agriculture and Forestry. She has served on Senate at Wits for over 25 years and has served on Council for three terms. She is married to Bob Scholes, a systems ecologist, and they have a 23-year-old son.
Engineering Technology & Applied Sciences
Tunisia
Dr. Alouini was born in Tunis, Tunisia. He received the Diplome d'Ingenieur from the École Nationale Supérieure des Télécommunications (TELECOM Paris Tech) and the Diplome d'Etudes Approfondies (D.E.A.) in Electronics with Highest Honors from the Université Pierre & Marie Curie in Paris, France, both in 1993. He received the M.S.E.E. degree from the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech), Atlanta, USA, in 1995, and a PhD in Electrical Engineering from California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena, USA, in 1998. He also received the Habilitation degree from the Université Pierre & Marie Curie, Paris, France, in 2003.
Dr. Alouini served as a faculty member in the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA, then in the Texas A&M University at Qatar, Education City, Doha, Qatar before joining King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Thuwal, Makkah Province, Saudi Arabia as a Professor of Electrical Engineering in 2009. His current research interests include design and performance analysis of diversity combining techniques, MIMO techniques, multi-hop/cooperative communications systems, optical wireless communication systems, cognitive radio systems, and multi-resolution, hierarchical and adaptive modulation schemes.
Dr. Alouini has published several papers on the above subjects and he is co-author of the textbook Digital Communication over Fading Channels published by Wiley Interscience. He has also won several awards in his career. For instance, he recently received the 2016 Recognition Award of the IEEE Communication Society Wireless Technical Committee, the 2016 Abdul Hameed Shoman Award for Arab Researchers in Engineering Sciences, and the Inaugural Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Science & Technology Achievement Award in Engineering Sciences in 2017.
Other recognitions include his election as Fellow of the (i) Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), (ii) Academy of Engineering & Technology of the Developing World (AETDEW), (iii) European Academy of Sciences and Arts (EASA) (Class VI: Technical & Environmental Sciences), and (iv) African Academy of Sciences (AAS). He is also IEEE Distinguished Lecturer for the IEEE Communication Society and IEEE Vehicular Technology Society, member for several times in the annual Thomson ISI Web of Knowledge list of Highly Cited Researchers as well as the Shanghai Ranking/Elsevier list of Most Cited Researchers, and a co-recipient of best paper awards in eleven IEEE conferences (including ICC, GLOBECOM, VTC, PIMRC, ISWCS, and DySPAN).
Medical & Health Sciences
Uganda
Kyobutungi is the Executive Director at the African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC). She was formerly the Director of Research and has served APHRC in several leadership roles over the past decade, having joined as a Post-doctoral Fellow in May, 2006.
Catherine is an Alumnus of the University of Heidelberg having completed her doctoral studies in Epidemiology in the then Department of Tropical Hygiene and Public Health, under the auspices of the Graduertienkolleg 793 in April 2006. She also obtained a Master of Science degree in Community Health and Health Management in 2002 from the same department. Prior to her graduate studies, Catherine studied Medicine at Makerere University, Kampala after which she worked as a medical officer at Rushere hospital, a rural health facility in Western Uganda for three years. Before and during her graduate studies, she was an Assistant Lecturer and later a Lecturer in the Department of Community Health at the Mbarara University of Science and Technology.
Catherine has served on numerous boards, panels, and expert groups, including the INDEPTH Network Board of Directors and the Advisory Council of the Carnegie African Diaspora Program at the Institute of International Education. She was the inaugural Chairperson of the Kenya Epidemiological Association. Her research interests include migrant health, community participation in health, and the epidemiology of non-communicable diseases.
Catherine is driven by the belief that Africa has the potential to solve its own problems and she tries to make her own contribution, however small.
Agricultural & Nutritional Sciences
South Africa
Prof Yinsuo Jia obtained his PhD in 2006 from University of the Witwatersrand (South Africa); and joined the Institute of Genetics and Physiology, Hebei Academy of Agriculture and Forestry sciences (China) and rose through the ranks to become full Professor in 2005.
His research interests include plant resistance physiology involving the development of water-saving technique and drought-resistant physiology of wheat; crop breeding focusing on the hybrid maize breeding using QPM germplasm and domestic maize resource for high yield, quality and disease-resistance; gathering, utilization and products development of plant germplasm resources including the bioenergy development from plant wastes.
He was Director of Crop Cultivation Lab and the International Cooperation Research Center in Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Director of Institute of Genetic Physiology, Hebei Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences, the General Manager of Hebei Jiazuo Agriculture and Technology Co., Ltd., Shijiazhuang, China. At present, he has been the Chief executive of Hebei Richard Agriculture Science and Technology Co., Ltd.
He has served as a bridge and link between Chinese and African cooperation (translators), widely sought funding from the Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology, and conducted research on agricultural and scientific cooperation between China and Africa. He is committee member of Crop Cultivation of the People’s Republic of China and several other professional societies. He has 123 publications and other scientific research fruits up to present.
Chemical Sciences
South Africa
Priscilla Baker is the South African Research Chair Initiative (SARChI) Chair in Analytical Systems and Processes for Priority and Emerging Contaminants (ASPPEC) and a Senior Professor of Chemistry at the University of Western Cape (UWC). Having been elected as a fellow in 2018, Baker is an alumnus of University of Cape Town. Prof Baker is an analytical-electrochemist and has more than 15 years of experience in the development of organic and inorganic smart materials (polymer blends, hydrogels, Schiff base metal complexes) for application in sensors, electroanalysis and energy-generation systems. She is the co-leader of SensorLab™ (UWC Sensor Research Laboratories) since 2004, and the research centre’s team comprised 8 Academic staff, postdoctoral fellows and 40+ postgraduate students. Baker currently serves as the director of the South African Systems Analysis Centre (SASAC, November 2017-present), former Department of Chemistry HoD, (UWC, 2017-2018), chairperson of the South African Chemical Institute Electrochemistry Chapter (2006-2018) and current Regional Representative (Africa): International Society of Electrochemistry. Baker was announced Winner of the Department of Science and Technology, Distinguished Woman Scientist award in the category Physical and Engineering Sciences (2014) and in the same year she was awarded the Deputy Vice Chancellor’s Young Researcher Award, by the University of the Western Cape. Baker believes Current approaches to water screening for emerging and persistent chemical residues requires considerable effort, with high associated costs, sample processing and lengthy laboratory centered analysis times. Her research focuses on Electrochemistry as a clean, versatile and powerful tool for the detection of emerging and priority pollutants in water and other environmental matrices.
Medical & Health Sciences
Burkina Faso
Jean-Bosco Ouedraogo is a parasitologist and medical researcher with over twenty years experience in the field of malaria drug resistance and epidemiological, clinical and vaccine research. He is President of the Association for Science of Health of Burkina Faso and teaches at the University of Ouagadougou and Bobo-Dioulasso University. He has also served as Regional Director of the Regional Institute of Health Sciences (ICES) in Bobo-Dioulasso since 1997. Professor Ouédraogo was nominated by his peers as the first Executive Secretary of the West African Research Network for Health (ROARES) in November 2010. Prof Ouédraogo serves as a member of several scientific societies, has directed over ten international malariology courses organised by the WHO Regional Office for Africa, and has published over 100 publications in leading journals.
Physical Sciences
South Africa
Prof Connell obtained his PhD in 1989 from the University of the Witwatersrand.
He is currently professor of physics at the University of Johannesburg within the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment in the Department of Mechanical Engineering Science. He has research interests in Particle Physics, Nuclear Physics, Nuclear Energy, Materials Science, Quantum Physics, High Performance Computing and Applied (innovation) Physics. His rating by the SA Research Funding Agency (NRF) cites him as having “considerable international recognition”. He is a past president of the South African Institute of Physics. He is the founding member of the South African participation in High Energy Physics at the ATLAS Experiment at CERN, where with his group he participates in a Beyond Standard Model search as well as engineering and technical activities. He has published over 150 papers in International Journals and is also an ATLAS author. He has worked for many years at the European Synchrotron Research Facility (ESRF). He is interested in technology for competitive industry and in innovation and has a project on the intelligent sensor based sorting of diamond in kimberlite, which is now being commercialized. A current major activity in the service of the discipline is the development of the South African user base for Light Sources, (these are premier international multi-disciplinary research tools) and the implementation of the roadmap towards the African Light Source.
Biosciences
South Africa
Dr. Janice Limson is affiliated to Biotechnology, Rhodes University, where Dr. Janice Limson is currently working as Director & Professor. Dr. Janice Limson has authored and co-authored several national and international publications and also working as a reviewer for reputed professional journals. Dr. Janice Limson is having an active association with different societies and academies around the world. Dr. Janice Limson made his mark in the scientific community with the contributions and widely recognition from honourable subject experts around the world. Dr. Janice Limson has received several awards for the contributions to the scientific community. Dr. Janice Limson major research interest involves Biosensors, Biofuel cells and Nanobiotechnology.
Medical & Health Sciences
Nigeria
Professor Okonofua obtained the fellowships of the West African College of Surgeons in 1984 and the Nigerian Postgraduate Medical College in Obstetrics and Gynecology in 1985. He obtained PhD in public health from the Karolinka University in Sweden in 2005. He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, a Takemi Fellow in International Health at Harvard University, and a Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science. He joined the services of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife (Nigeria) in 1986, and rose through the ranks to become full professor in 1992.
His research interests include reproductive health, especially maternal, child and adolescent reproductive health. His research focuses on identifying the causal pathways for reproductive health mishaps, and pinpointing innovative solutions through interventional and translational research.
He has been the head of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Obafemi Awolowo University and the University of Benin (Nigeria), Dean of the Faculty of Medicine in the two Universities, and Provost of the College of Medical Sciences at the University of Benin. He is currently the pioneer Vice-Chancellor of the University of Medical Sciences in Ondo City, Nigeria. He has been the Adviser on health to President Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria, the Executive Director of the International Federation of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and Program Officer at the Ford Foundation. He is the Editor in Chief of the African Journal of Reproductive Health, founder of the Women’s Health and Action Research Centre, the Centre Leader of the World Bank African Centre of Excellence in Reproductive Health Innovation at the University of Benin (Nigeria), and a member of the editorial board of the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. He has 277 publications (2018).
Medical & Health Sciences
Egypt
Prof. Elmazar obtained his B Pharm in 1970 and M Pharm (Pharmacology) in 1973 from Cairo University, and his PhD (Pharmacology) in 1978 from Guy’s Hospital Medical School, London University.
Elmazar was a Professor and Chairman of Pharmacology Department, Mansoura University (1989), vice Dean (2001) & Dean (2003) of Faculty of Pharmacy, Helwan University, Founding Dean of Faculty of Pharmacy, Ahram Canadian University (2005, & 2007 to 2012), Founding Director of the Centre for Community & Consulting Services at BUE (2006).
Prof. Elmazar is a member of several national & international scientific societies, he is also:
- U.S. Citizen Ambassador Program (Birth Defects), Washington.
- An Alexander von Humboldt Fellow
- Fellow of The Egyptian Academy of Sciences, FEAS (2010)
- Fellow of The African Academy of Sciences, FAAS (2018)
- Member of Medical & Nutritional Council, Academy of Scientific Research & Technology - Ministry of Scientific Research June 2010 – Dec. 2015.
- Member of Drug Research Council, Academy of Scientific Research & Technology - Ministry of Scientific Research Jan. 2016 – to date. - Advisor to the Industrial Modernization Center (IMC) – Ministry of Industry and Foreign Trade 2006- to date.
- Member of Drug Technical committee from 2011 to 2014, Pharmacology from 2008 to 2015, Bioequivalence, and Non-Reference Drugs Committees, Central Administration for Pharmaceutical Affairs, Ministry of Health & Population, Oct 2011 – to date.
- A Leading Scientist of the 57 member states of the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC).
Editor and reviewer of several national & international scientific journals. Prof. Elmazar also has six international Patents.
Major research interests are in reproductive toxicology especially teratology (anticonvalsants, retinoids, foods like potatoes as well as on the mechanism of teratogenicity of caffeine).
Publications: 178 (As per Scopus, 81 International Publications, h-index 21, total citation 1302, cumulative IF 218).
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Mohey_Elmazar
Biosciences
Ghana
Andrew Anthony Adjei obtained his PhD in 1997 from the University of The Ryyuus, Okinawa, Japan and then joined the Department of Parasite Immunology, Tucson Medical Centre, USA. In August 2000, he relocated to Ghana and joined the Pathology Department, University of Ghana School of Medicine and Dentistry (UGSMD) as a Senior Research Fellow and rose through the ranks to become full Professor in 2004.
His research interests include the Pathogenesis of cerebral malaria; epidemiology of cryptosporidiosis; human papilloma virus types and its association with cervical cancer; transfusion-transmitted pathogens; viral infections (HIV/AIDS, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, hepatitis E), epidemiology of prostate and breast cancers, host-parasite interactions.
Professor Adjei has been Head of Department of Biomedical and Allied Health Sciences, Deputy Provost UG College Of Health Sciences (CHS), Director of Research, Innovation and Development (UG), Editor-in-Chief, Ghana Journal of Allied Health Sciences, Coordinator of Research, UG School of Medicine and Dentistry, President of Ghana Association of Medical Laboratory Scientists, Project Coordinator, Transdisciplinary Training for Resource Efficiency and Climate Change Adaptation in Africa (TRECCAfrica), Project Coordinator, Building Stronger Universities (Partnership between UG and Universities in Denmark), and several other professional activities,
Currently, he is the Coordinator of the Vice Chancellor’s Strategic Teams, Coordinator of the Worldwide Universities Network, Coordinator of the Australian-Africa Universities Network, Chairman of the Ethics and Protocol Review Committee, Editor-in-Chief, CHS Journal, Chairman of CHS Scientific Conference Planning Committee, Coordinator, MPhil programme in Immunology, and a Professor of Immunology and Pathology at the Department of Pathology. He has 129 publications.
Engineering Technology & Applied Sciences
Egypt
Salah S A Obayya joined Zewail City of Science and Technology (ZC) in 2012 where he is now Chair Professor and Founding Director of Center for Photonics and Smart Materials (CPSM). He occupied the positions of the Vice Chairman of ZC and Director-General of Research Institutes at the same institution. Prior to Zewail City, he took up several academic posts at Brunel University UK (tenured Associate Professor, 2002), University of Leeds, UK (tenured Professor, 2006) and University of South Wales, UK (tenured Chair Professor, 2008) where he was the Founding Director of Photonics and Broadband Communications (PBC) Research Center and also he was the Director of Postgraduate Programs at the same institution.
He has established an outstanding international reputation in the area of green nanophotonics with focus on the intelligent computational modeling of modern nano-photonic devices enabling technologies needed to realise low-carbon green society. He has published 248 journal publications, mostly in OSA, IEEE and IET/IEE, authored 3 books (Computational Photonics, Wiley 2010 and Computational Liquid Crystal Photonics, Wiley 2016, Computational of Photonic sensors, 2018) both are adopted references for Graduate Programs in Photonics at international Universities such as MIT, Purdue University, Indian Institute of Technology, National University of Singapore, Mansoura University and Zewail City, and 254 conference papers in international conference in photonics, many of these are invited talks, and keynote lectures, attracted external funding, from both industry and Research Councils, in the region of $ 4M, and supervised to successful completion 35 PhD students, over 70 MSc/MRes/MPhil students and 15 postdoctoral research fellows. He led the team that developed one of the world’s best comprehensive numerical packages for the analysis, design and optimization of nano-photonic devices, and subsystems, where a number of “world-first” numerical approaches have been developed. His five key papers introducing his novel numerical package; have been cited more than 400 times. His publications also have been cited more than 3350 times, with an h-index of 31 and i10-index of 100. His numerical package has been widely adopted by both academic and industrial Photonics communities to analyze, design and optimize the performance of a wide range of nano-photonic devices employed for applications in solar cells, optical telecoms, sensing, optical imaging and encryption and other applications.
He has served the International Photonics Society through active contribution to the organization and technical committees of a number of international conferences. Since 2007, he has been an Associate Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, and Associate Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Optical and Quantum Electronics, and served as Guest Editor-in-Chief of J Optical and Quantum Electronics (2010), and founding member of Editorial Board of Materials Theory Journal (Springer) and acted as Reviewer for many international Photonics Journals such as IEEE J Lightwave Technology, IEEE Photonics Journal IEEE J Quantum Electronics, IEEE J Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, IET Optoelectronics, OSA Optics Express, OSA Optics Letters, and many others. Moreover, he acted as Technical expert and Reviewer for a number of research funding councils and learnt societies such as Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), UK, Royal Society, UK, Royal Academy of Engineering, UK, National Academy of Arts and Sciences, Holland, Science and Technology Development Fund, Egypt, National Telecom Regulatory Authority (NTRA), Egypt and others.
Recently, Dr. Obayya was elected as the first Arab and African Fellow of Optical Society of America (OSA) in Sep. 2019. He was elected Fellow of African Academy of Science (AAS), 2018, and Chairman of Nanotechnology Group of AAS. Also, He was elected as a board member of Egyptian Society of Optical Science and Applications (ESOSA), elected Fellow of the Institute of Engineering and Technology, IET (formerly FIEE), UK, 2010, elected Fellow of The Institute of Physics (IoP), UK, 2010, elected Fellow of The Higher Education Academy, UK, and Senior member of IEEE, USA, 2005, member of Board of Academy of Scientific Research and Technology (Egypt’s National Academy of Science), Member of Wales Institute of Mathematical and Computational Sciences (WIMCS), UK, Member of Optical Society of America (OSA), Member of International Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE), USA and Member of Applied Computational Electromganetic Society (ACES).
As remarkable recognition of his research achievements, he was the recipient of many national and international awards and recognitions such as Order of Science and Arts of the first class, the most prestigious medal awarded by President of Egypt, President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, in the National Science Day, Egypt, 2019, Best Scientific Book, COMSTECH-Awards-2017, 2019, State Appreciation Award, Egypt, 2019, UNESCO Chair, Paris, 2019, Honorary Special Chair Professor of Photonics, University of Nottingham, UK, 2017, for his outstanding world-class research record, elected Senior Associate by Board of Directors, International Center for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), Italy, 2017, for his pivotal role in photonics research and education in Egypt, The Region and Africa and elected Senior Member by Board of Directors, Optical Society of America, OSA, 2017 for his internationally recognized research in Photonics, UAE President Khalifa Award for Distinguished Arab Professor in Scientific Research in April 2017, Doctor of Science (DSc) degree in Photonics from City University of London in Jan 2016; a degree awarded only to those who gained international distinction in their own fields, Arab Thought Foundation Award in Scientific Creativity (Lebanon), Dec. 2015; only one award in all fields of Science and Engineering is granted each year for one Arab Scientist, Egyptian Academy of Scientific Research and Technology (ASRT) Award in Engineering Sciences Creativity, Sept. 2014; only one award is granted each year for an Egyptian Scientist in Engineering Sciences, Abdul Hameed Shoman Foundation (Jordan) Award for Arab Scientists in Engineering Sciences, Oct. 2014; only one award is granted each year for one Arab Scientists in Engineering Sciences, State Award of Excellence for Engineering Sciences from the Egyptian State, Sept. 2013; only one scientist is awarded this prestigious award every year, Incentive State Award for Engineering Sciences from the Egyptian State, Sept. 2005, and many others.
Medical & Health Sciences
South Africa
Jean Nachega, MD, PhD, MPH, FRCP: Associate Professor of Medicine, Infectious Diseases, Microbiology and Epidemiology, at Graduate School of Public Health, Pittsburgh University. Dr Nachega is also an Adjunct Associate Professor of Epidemiology and International Health at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; and Professor Extraordinary of Medicine and Director of the Center for Infectious Diseases, at Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa.
He received his training in Belgium (University of Louvain), UK (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine), USA (Johns Hopkins University & Harvard University). He has over 20 year-experience in patient care, teaching, designing and implementing HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis studies or programs funded by NIH/NIAID, PEPFAR, EDCTP, and Wellcome Trust. He is a lead HIV Investigator within AIDS Clinical Trial Group (ACTG) and an ad hoc consultant at WHO, CDC, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, as well as a member of South African Academy of Sciences.
Agricultural & Nutritional Sciences
Sudan
Prof Hassan was born in Sudan in 1953. He holds BSc (1977) and MSc (1982) degrees in agric. economics from University of Khartoum, Sudan, and MSc (1988) and PhD (1989) degrees in economics from Iowa State University, USA. He is currently Emeritus Professor at the University of Pretoria. He served as Professor and founding Director of the Centre for Environmental Economics and Policy in Africa (CEEPA) till 2016. Previously worked at the CSIR in S. Africa, CIMMYT International in east Africa, and University of Juba, in Sudan.
Main research expertise covers the economics and policy of agriculture, natural resources and environmental management with current special interest in environmental accounting, climate change economics and sustainable management of natural ecosystems, particularly the economics and policy of governing the commons.
Served as member of many national and international Boards & Science Councils including: The UN Committee for Development Policy, The CGIAR Science Council, GEF Science and Technical Advisory Panel, Science Panel and Working Group Co-Chair of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Climate Change of the UN CFS, Academic Advisory Panel for the World Development Report (WDR 2009) on climate change, Stockholm Resilience Centre Board, Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) Science Advisory Council, Human Sciences Research Council of SA Board. Research Fellow of the Economic Research Forum (ERF), Senior Fellow of ZEF at Bon University, Senior Fellow of the African Association of Agricultural Economists. Founding Chief Editor of the African Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, and associate editor and member of editorial Boards of many international journals and has published over 160 articles and chapters and 14 books.
Chemical Sciences
South Africa
Susan Bourne is the Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University of Cape Town. Her PhD, obtained at the University of Cape Town, was a study of organic inclusion compounds undertaken under the supervision of Luigi Nassimbeni. After a postdoctoral period in Texas, USA, she joined the Chemistry Department at the University of Cape Town and rose through the ranks to become full Professor in 2008.
Her research interests include the application of physicochemical methods to inclusion compounds and crystal engineering of metal-organic materials, all with the aim of correlating solid state structure with physical properties and reactivity. She has published over 140 papers and has supervised over 20 postgraduate students.
She has served as Head of Department, Deputy Dean, and as interim Dean of the Faculty of Science. She has held several offices in the European Crystallographic Association, and is currently Chair of the Structural Chemistry Commission of the International Union of Crystallography. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and a Fellow of the University of Cape Town.
Medical & Health Sciences
Nigeria
Tolu Oni is a Public Health Physician and Epidemiologist at the University of Cambridge MRC Epidemiology Unit. She was until June 2018 an Associate Professor at the School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, where she retains an honorary appointment. She leads the Research Initiative for Cities Health and Equity (RICHE), and her urban health research takes a pan-African approach to providing evidence to support implementation of healthy public policies, and translation of research findings into policy and practice through collaboration with researchers and practitioners across disciplines and sectors.
She has published her work on HIV, TB, infectious/NCD multimorbidity and urban health (H-Index 20; Citations 2955) in high impact journals including Nature and PLOS Medicine. Profiled in the Lancet in 2016 (Tolullah Oni: public health specialist with a global ambition. Lancet. 2016;387:1712), and featured in Science in 2018 (http://science.sciencemag.org/content/360/6387/391.full), she has received several awards in recognition of her research including the South African National Science and Technology Forum (NSTF) Emerging Researcher award, and the Carnegie Corporation “Next Generation of African Academics award. She is a Next Einstein Forum Fellow, a Stellenbosch Institute of Advanced Studies (STIAS) Iso Lomso Fellow, a member of the World Economic Forum Africa Strategic Group, and co-Chair of the Global Young Academy. She serves on several steering committees including the International Science Council Programme on Urban Health and Wellbeing, and the Future Earth Advisory Council. She is an Editorial Board member of several international journals including Cities and Health journal, the Journal of Urban Health, and Lancet Planetary Health. She also works to promote science and research as key drivers of development in Africa through a coordinated approach between science, policy and society role players, to identify creative strategies to address complex population health and broader societal challenges.
Policy Sciences
Mali
Prof Sokona obtained his PhD in 1981 from Ecole Nationale Superieure des Mines of Paris and Universite Paris VI Jussieu (France). He is currently Special Advisor for Sustainable Development at the South Centre. With over 35 years of experience addressing energy, environment and sustainable development in Africa. Reflecting his status, Prof Sokona was elected Vice-Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in October 2015. Prior to this, Prof Sokona was Co-Chair of IPCC Working Group III on the mitigation of climate change for the Fifth Assessment Report after serving as a Lead Author since 1990. In addition to these achievements, Prof Sokona has a proven track record of research coordination, organisational leadership and management, for example, leading the conception, development and initiating the Africa Renewable Energy Initiative, as the first Coordinator of the African Climate Policy Centre (ACPC) and as Executive Secretary of the Sahara and the Sahel Observatory (OSS). Prof Sokona’s advice is highly sought after, and as such, he is affiliated with numerous boards and organisations, including Honorary Professor at the University College London (UCL), Member of Science Advisory Committee of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Member of the Advisory Board of the Payne Institute at the Colorado School of Mines, and as a Special Advisor to the African Energy Leaders Group. In short, Prof Sokona is a global figure, with deep scientific and technical knowledge, extensive policy experience and an unreserved personal commitment to African led development.
Chemical Sciences
Nigeria
Dr. Omowunmi “Wunmi” Sadik serves as Professor of Chemistry and (inaugural/founding) Director of the Center for Research in Advanced sensing Technologies and Environmental Sustainability (CREATES) at the State University of New York at Binghamton (SUNY Binghamton), where she has been a member of the faculty since (August) 1996. She is also the President and Co-Founder of the Sustainable Nanotechnology Organization (SNO) (www.susnano.org), a non-profit, international professional society dedicated to advancing sustainable nanotechnological solutions around the world through education, research, and the promotion of the responsible growth of nanotechnology. Sadik received her BS and MS in chemistry from the University of Lagos (Nigeria) and her PhD in chemistry from the University of Wollongong (Australia). She has held appointments at Harvard University, Cornell University and the Naval Research Laboratory. Professor Sadik is the author/co-author over 170 scientific publications, and she has given over 400 invited lectures and conference contributions across the world. Sadik holds five U.S. patents for her work on biosensors.
Her inventions are helping to drive changes in many areas such as the early diagnosis of cancer, genetic testing, pain management in hospital patients and environmental analysis. Her team has translated basic research in biosensors to design a portable, fully autonomous, and remotely operated sensing device, known as U-PAC. Sadik has received several honors and awards and is a fellow of several organizations. Sadik is the first person of Nigerian origin to receive the distinguished Harvard University Radcliffe Fellowship. She was chosen as one of 14 members of the 2017-2018 Jefferson Science Fellowship program. As a fellow, Sadik will spend a year as a senior adviser to the U.S. Secretary of State, providing information on scientific advancements to be used to make policy decisions. She is only the fourth woman and the first female scientist to be conferred with the Nigerian National Order of Merit (NNOM) Award, Nigeria’s highest national honor for academicians. Out of the 35 plus PhD students that she has mentored to date, 15 of them have gone on to hold tenure-track faculty positions in the US and around the world. Sadik is recognized for her research innovation (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omowunmi_Sadik) and sustainable nanotechnology.
Medical & Health Sciences
Malawi
Moffat Nyirenda is a Diabetologist/Endocrinologist and Professor of Medicine (Global Non-Communicable Diseases) at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), and leads the non-communicable disease (NCD) research theme at MRC/UVRI and LSHTM Uganda Research.
Moffat was among the first graduates from the College of Medicine in Malawi, with “hybrid” training between University College London and University of Malawi. He subsequently trained and worked at the University of Edinburgh, supported by a prestigious MRC Clinician Scientist Fellowship award. In 2010 Moffat returned to Malawi where he was Professor of Research at the College of Medicine and Associate Director of Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Programme, before taking up his current position at LSHTM in August 2013. Moffat’s research interests lie in mechanistic understanding of the aetiology of chronic non-communicable diseases (NCDs), including i) investigating the association between early environmental insults and the risk of obesity, diabetes and hypertension in adulthood; ii) using cross-cutting approaches to examine the interactions between infection and NCDs; iii) contributing to genomics studies of NCDs in sub-Saharan Africa. Moffat has particular interest in research capacity building in Africa, and is Director of the Southern Africa Consortium for Research Excellence (SACORE), funded through the Wellcome Trust’s African Institutions Initiative, which aims to establish a vibrant research culture in medical schools in Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Medical & Health Sciences
Kenya
Kawango Agot is a Kenyan research scientist. She obtained her PhD and MPH from the University of Washington, Seattle and proceeded to coordinate the trial on male circumcision for HIV prevention at the Kisumu site, Kenya. She then led community engagement activities to obtain buy-in for voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC). The organization she founded – IRDO (Impact, Research, and Development Organization) – has provided over 600,000 male circumcisions to date. In addition to VMMC trials and studies, Dr. Agot has conducted multiple studies on various topics, including on pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), multipurpose technologies (MPT) and HIV self-testing. She has worked with other colleagues to explore and promote the concept of secondary distribution of HIV self-tests (HIVST) to promote partner testing and inform sexual decisions. She is studying the impact of HIVST on enrollment of female sex workers into HIV prevention programs and optimal ways of promoting testing among adolescent girls and young women.
Agricultural & Nutritional Sciences
Burkina Faso
Prof Paco Sereme is a Research Director in plant pathology at the National Agricultural Research Institute of Burkina Faso (INERA). Graduated as Agronomist in Crop protection from the University of Niamey (Niger), he then obtained a PhD and the French Doctorat d’Etat Es-Sciences in plant pathology from the Universities of Rennes I (France) and Cocody (Côte d’Ivoire) respectively.
He has shown the pathogenic variability of pearl millet downy mildew fungus in Burkina Faso used for improving control of the disease. He has also revealed a third taxon of Colletorichum as responsible of cowpea brown blotch disease in Burkina Faso, contributed to improve knowledge of the bio-ecology of the main pathogens of this disease, developed suitable use of indigenous plants extracts from the country for the control of seed-borne diseases of the main staple food crops. He has published more than 40 scientific articles in peer review journals.
Having served successively as Director of INERA (8 years), Executive Director of CORAF/WECARD (10 years) and involved in several committees, Board of trustees (FARA, ICRAF, ICRISAT, Agreenium, Africa Harvest), Prof SEREME has played an active role in the various reforms for improving agricultural research aims at transforming agriculture in West and Central Africa (WCA). CORAF/WECARD’s new vision 2007-2016 developed under his leadership and implanted successfully through important regional programs such as the West African Agricultural Productivity Program strengthened the role of this institution as a privileged tool for agricultural research in cooperation in WCA.
Funding member of the National Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters of Burkina Faso, Prof SEREME received recognitions from Burkina Faso (“Officier de l’Ordre National”), Côte d’Ivoire (“Chevalier de l’Ordre de Mérite de l’Education Nationale”), CAMES (“Chevalier de l’Ordre International des Palmes Académiques”). He was also granted with award recognitions from CORAF/WECARD, ICRAF and FARA.
Policy Sciences
Uganda
Prof Kasimbazi is a professor of Environmental Law and Policy and Director, Environmental Law Centre, School of Law, Makerere University, Uganda. He has taught law for over 22 years. He is former Deputy Dean, Dean and Head, Department of Public and Comparative Law respectively at School of Law, Makerere University. He is external examiner of various universities in Africa. |
Mathematical Sciences
Ethiopia
Shiferaw Berhanu is a Professor of Mathematics at Temple University. He is one of the founders of the PhD program in mathematics that was launched by AAU. In 2012, in joint work with Ming Xiao, they resolved an important 20 year-old conjecture of X. Huang in Several Complex Variables. Their work has inspired major advances and the resolutions of other longstanding conjectures in CR Geometry. He is a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society and an Associate Fellow of the Ethiopian Academy of Sciences.
Berhanu has recruited eighteen students from Ethiopia who all completed their Ph.Ds at Temple University. He was the founder of the Ph.D. program in mathematics that was launched by the AAU in Ethiopia and has helped establish two other Ph.D. programs in Ethiopia.
Medical & Health Sciences
Kenya
Amina Abubakar is an Associate Professor of Psychology and Public Health at Pwani University, Kenya and a Research Fellow at the Kenya Medical Research Institute/Wellcome Trust Research Programme. She is also an honorary fellow at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, UK. |
Antia Effiom Edem
Nigeria
|Elected: 2017
Geological, Environmental, Earth & Space Sciences
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Geological, Environmental, Earth & Space Sciences
Nigeria
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Mathematical Sciences
Senegal
Professor Wade is a well-respected mathematician and a leading expert in the field of Poisson geometry. She has published 28 research papers in peer-reviewed journals. Among her great achievements, she devised formula for the study of the stable big tangent bundle of index 1. In addition, she pioneered the Levi decomposition problem for local Poisson structures as well as the theory generalized contact structures.
Professor Wade has given invited talks and workshops in conferences and at academic institutions in the USA, Canada, France, Italy and China. She has been Managing Editor of African Diaspora Journal of Mathematics for several years. Recently, she has being appointed the Deputy Editor of the journal Afrika Matematika. Being an ardent promoter of women’s participation in STEM education, Professor Wade is serving as a Member of the ICM 2018 (WM)^2 Program Committee.
Recognitions: membership in national and other academies, Prizes, Awards, etc.
Wade is the first woman to lead an African institute in mathematical sciences.
Agricultural & Nutritional Sciences
Ethiopia
Prof. Afwork Gebrekirstos is a Scientist at the World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF). She has over 20 years of experience in research, tertiary-level teaching and consulting. Her research focuses on tropical forest ecology and management, which includes dendrochronology (to reconstruct past climates and the effects and consequences of global climate change on hydrology, biodiversity and livelihoods), plant water relations, agroforestry and the restoration of degraded landscapes.
She supervised many PhD and MSc students from across Africa. Together with her students and partners she has produced relevant information on climate variability and climate change (e.g. reconstructed 360 years of precipitation data the longest for Eastern Africa yet), establishing tools to facilitate adaptation planning by local decision-makers and for early warning systems (including extreme drought/ flood, El Niño–Southern Oscillation events and determine large scale atmospheric circulation patterns). Raising research funds through her own initiative to build scientific capacity and facilities in Africa. She established a dendrochronology lab in Ethiopia funded by the German Research Council, DFG in 2009. She established a state-of-the-art dendrochronology lab at the World Agroforestry Centre in Nairobi with financial support from the CGIAR Research Programme on Climate Change and Food Security, CCAFS, in 2013. Prof. Afwork Gebrekirstos has published over 70 papers in international peer-reviewed journals, conference papers and book chapters and gave keynote speeches, presentations in major international conferences.
In recognition of her research, Prof. Afwork Gebrekirstos has received various distinctions, notably the prestigious African Climate Award for excellence in research in climate change adaptation and mitigation in 2014. In 2016, she was awarded a visiting professor position under the University of Dresden’s Eleonore Trefftz Programme. She also received the 2009 Special Award for Ground Breaking Science — African wide Young Professionals and Women in Science Competitions organized by the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA), African Technology Policy Studies (ATPS), Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA), Regional Universities Forum for Capacity Building in Agriculture (RUFORUM) and the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD). She also serves on the Mountain Research Institute (MRI) Science Leadership Council, Scientific Steering Committee of the Past Global Changes project (PAGES) and is a member of many societies. Prof. Afwork Gebrekirstos is Vice president of the Board International Union of Agroforestry and Chair of The AAS Committee on Environment.
Agricultural & Nutritional Sciences
Togo
Bassirou holds a DVM and a PhD in epidemiology. He worked for 5 years (1995-2000) in West Africa as a livestock development program coordinator for Vétérinaires Sans Frontières. He went for a 4 year (2000-2004) epidemiology postdoctoral fellowship at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETHZ) and Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH). He subsequently led for 4 years (2004-2008) a research group in the Horn Africa, West Africa and Central Asia where he contributed to validate the One Health concept. Between 2009-2018, he was the Managing Director of CSRS where he led the North-South science diplomacy. He is since 2009 to date the Director of the consortium Afrique One (DELTAS I) contributing to scientific foundation of One Health and the capacity development of a cohort of 70 young scientists in the same field. He is a guest lecturer at University of Liège (Belgium), Swiss TPH/ University of Basel (Switzerland), African universities (Côte d’Ivoire, Togo) and at the Inter-States Veterinary School (Senegal) of which he is the chair of the scientific advisory board since 2017. He is author and co-author of up to 200 peer review papers and fellow of the African Academy of Sciences.
Kassaye Asfawossen Asrat
Ethiopia
|Elected: 2017
Geological, Environmental, Earth & Space Sciences
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Geological, Environmental, Earth & Space Sciences
Ethiopia
Prof. Asfawossen Asrat Kassaye is Professor of Geology at the School of Earth Sciences of Addis Ababa University (AAU). He received his PhD from the University of Henri Poincare, Nancy (France) in Geochemistry and Petrology in 2002. He is actively engaged in teaching both at postgraduate and undergraduate levels and in both basic and applied research. He has completed/is undertaking several research projects funded by local and international sources. He has authored/co-authored close to 80 peer-reviewed publications and a book in various fields including Paleoclimatology-Paleoenvironment, Petrology-Geochemistry and Geoheritage in high impact journals. He has been serving at senior level international leadership roles (e.g., Scientific Steering Committee member of PAGES-Past Global Changes; Vice President of the Geological Society of Africa; Member of the UNESCO Global Geoparks Council; Associate Editor of ‘Quaternary International’; Editor of ‘Scientific African’), and has been recognized as a Fellow of the African Academy of Sciences, Ethiopian Academy of Sciences, and as a young affiliate of TWAS (World Academy of Sciences).
Elected: